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Adolfo Guzman-Lopez
he/him
Explore L.A. Correspondent
What I cover
I report on the region’s art, artists and creative communities, as well as the news of the day that gives the LAist audience what it needs to know to navigate life in Southern California.
My background
I was born in Mexico City and grew up in Tijuana and San Diego. I’ve put in a lot of miles driving around Southern California to report, and that’s led me to love how distinct each neighborhood is in geography, architecture, warmth and food. I've reported for LAist for 25 years, covering arts, politics, education and many other topics.
My goals
I want to highlight how people connect with each other through arts, culture and more.
Best way to contact me
If you've got any suggestions for people, events or issues I should be covering, email me at aguzman-lopez@laist.com
Stories by Adolfo Guzman-Lopez
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Years of conflict between Downtown's Latino Theater Company and The Latino Museum may end in an eviction notice. The L.A. City Council said the process will last 45 days.
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The man suspected of killing four homeless men in Orange County will face four counts of first degree murder and, if he’s convicted, possibly the death penalty.
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New York University education scholar Diane Ravitch is scheduled to deliver a free talk Tuesday at Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles’s Koreatown.
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The 12,000-student Inglewood Unified School District is on an unenviable list. It’s the only Southern California public school system district that expects to go bankrupt.
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The Inglewood Unified School Board met Wednesday night for its first meeting of the year. While many California public schools are facing state budget cuts, this 12,000-student district is bracing itself for especially tough decisions as it expects to run out of money in the next few months.
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Philanthropist Eli Broad's Los Angeles-based foundations released their biennial reports this week, and education continues to top the charts.
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A donation announced Tuesday to a 3-year-old journalism high school in the San Fernando Valley will help the struggling program to upgrade reporter training.
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L.A. Unified’s school board is set to start discussion Tuesday on a motion that could do away with enrollment boundaries for L.A. Unified neighborhood schools.
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The budget Gov. Jerry Brown released Thursday proposes education cuts and changes large and small.
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School officials and educators across the state were scrambling Thursday to decipher what Gov. Jerry Brown's 167-page budget document would mean to them after the governor's Department of Finance accidentally posted it online five days earlier than planned.
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A Washington D.C.-based think tank Wednesday released its list of the nation’s most influential education scholars. The rankings consider a blogosphere presence a must.
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At least eight new California laws affect school-age children in one way or another.